Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want pre-med/health care opportunities with the CDC and a top ranked hospital on campus, Emory is an excellent school comparable to other top 15 schools.
It's a tweener sitting naturally between the low Ivys and its peers and the next tier outside of the top 30.
Since it doesnt get people excited by it's athletics or isn't top in anything, it engenders ill will. It isn't the top choice for most that are there. And it doesn't have the pull to consulting, and Wall Street the way other undergraduate B Schools have.
As you look as other top 25 school, most have some sort of spike. Some division that is top 5 in something. Emory doesnt fit the bill.
I think it engenders so much ill will here as it represents the worst case outcome for Top 25/Top 30 striving students. An expensive private school that doesnt have name recognition and doesnt have a spike program.
It sits at the bottom of the Top schools and picks off students who weren't special enough/connected enough to get into higher ranked schools. It has the lowest yield in the Top 25 and that speaks volumes.
For those at schools ranked 30-50, it is a dream school. For those at schools ranked 1-10, it is a safety school.
Are you saying that kids in the 11-29 range should just throw in the towel?
Anonymous wrote:If you want pre-med/health care opportunities with the CDC and a top ranked hospital on campus, Emory is an excellent school comparable to other top 15 schools.
It's a tweener sitting naturally between the low Ivys and its peers and the next tier outside of the top 30.
Since it doesnt get people excited by it's athletics or isn't top in anything, it engenders ill will. It isn't the top choice for most that are there. And it doesn't have the pull to consulting, and Wall Street the way other undergraduate B Schools have.
As you look as other top 25 school, most have some sort of spike. Some division that is top 5 in something. Emory doesnt fit the bill.
I think it engenders so much ill will here as it represents the worst case outcome for Top 25/Top 30 striving students. An expensive private school that doesnt have name recognition and doesnt have a spike program.
It sits at the bottom of the Top schools and picks off students who weren't special enough/connected enough to get into higher ranked schools. It has the lowest yield in the Top 25 and that speaks volumes.
For those at schools ranked 30-50, it is a dream school. For those at schools ranked 1-10, it is a safety school.
Anonymous wrote:If you want pre-med/health care opportunities with the CDC and a top ranked hospital on campus, Emory is an excellent school comparable to other top 15 schools.
It's a tweener sitting naturally between the low Ivys and its peers and the next tier outside of the top 30.
Since it doesnt get people excited by it's athletics or isn't top in anything, it engenders ill will. It isn't the top choice for most that are there. And it doesn't have the pull to consulting, and Wall Street the way other undergraduate B Schools have.
As you look as other top 25 school, most have some sort of spike. Some division that is top 5 in something. Emory doesnt fit the bill.
I think it engenders so much ill will here as it represents the worst case outcome for Top 25/Top 30 striving students. An expensive private school that doesnt have name recognition and doesnt have a spike program.
It sits at the bottom of the Top schools and picks off students who weren't special enough/connected enough to get into higher ranked schools. It has the lowest yield in the Top 25 and that speaks volumes.
For those at schools ranked 30-50, it is a dream school. For those at schools ranked 1-10, it is a safety school.
Anonymous wrote:If you want pre-med/health care opportunities with the CDC and a top ranked hospital on campus, Emory is an excellent school comparable to other top 15 schools.
It's a tweener sitting naturally between the low Ivys and its peers and the next tier outside of the top 30.
Since it doesnt get people excited by it's athletics or isn't top in anything, it engenders ill will. It isn't the top choice for most that are there. And it doesn't have the pull to consulting, and Wall Street the way other undergraduate B Schools have.
As you look as other top 25 school, most have some sort of spike. Some division that is top 5 in something. Emory doesnt fit the bill.
I think it engenders so much ill will here as it represents the worst case outcome for Top 25/Top 30 striving students. An expensive private school that doesnt have name recognition and doesnt have a spike program.
It sits at the bottom of the Top schools and picks off students who weren't special enough/connected enough to get into higher ranked schools. It has the lowest yield in the Top 25 and that speaks volumes.
For those at schools ranked 30-50, it is a dream school. For those at schools ranked 1-10, it is a safety school.
Career outcomes out of Emory are pretty mediocre though...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you name any famous alumni from Emory from the past 20 years? Yeah, didn’t think so.
Well well well, this thread didn't age well did it?! PP I'm sure you heard the good news. The new Covid antiviral drug created at EMORY will be going to market soon. Who knew you were talking to yourself this whole time.
Medical breakthroughs happen at plenty of hospitals and universities across the country. Again, are there any significant alumni household names out of Emory?
DP: No connection to Emory, but what a weird way to evaluate a school? Who cares about whether a school produces a "household name"??
A lot of that has to do with size of an institution and the wealth/connectedness of people going in. Esp if you're going to tie it to 20 years which isn't a lot of time to become a household name. And, even so, that's such a rare outcome that it doesn't matter to that much to the value of the university. I'd care a lot more about the average career outcomes of students and the accomplishments of the faculty than that. And a quick glance at the Wikipedia page of famous alumni shows there's quite a fairly robust number of notable alumni--seems comparable or greater than others of their size/rank that I've noticed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you name any famous alumni from Emory from the past 20 years? Yeah, didn’t think so.
Well well well, this thread didn't age well did it?! PP I'm sure you heard the good news. The new Covid antiviral drug created at EMORY will be going to market soon. Who knew you were talking to yourself this whole time.
Medical breakthroughs happen at plenty of hospitals and universities across the country. Again, are there any significant alumni household names out of Emory?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you name any famous alumni from Emory from the past 20 years? Yeah, didn’t think so.
Well well well, this thread didn't age well did it?! PP I'm sure you heard the good news. The new Covid antiviral drug created at EMORY will be going to market soon. Who knew you were talking to yourself this whole time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mediocre at best.
What schools of comparable size and setting are better than mediocre in your mind?
Duke, Vanderbilt, Brown, Princeton, Yale, Columbia, Harvard, MIT, Northwestern, UChicago, WUSTL, UPenn, Rice, and I’m sure a few others I’m missing too. All mid-sized colleges near or in cities. All significantly better than Emory in just about every way.
You're pathetic, Rice, WashU and Vandy are not better schools. You trying to be elitist but then say Rice is better than Emory?! Have you seen a Rice grad on Wall Street?! I haven't, I've seen plenty of Emory grads though.
I went to Wash. U., and I think of WUSTL, Emory, Vanderbilt, Case Western, Rice and the University of Rochester as being about the same: Medical schools and teaching hospitals with undergraduate colleges attached.
I think Case and U Roc are a step below but there all great schools, maybe Vandy slightly better because of how famous it is.
Vandy is famous?
It's only "famous" in the mid-Atlantic and among the Southern good 'ol boys network (+ their wives).
No one cares about it in the rest of the country. It's clout has risen as a finishing school for wealthy private school kids, especially as the number of university seats have not kept up with demographic demands + the influx of rich foreign students from Asia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mediocre at best.
What schools of comparable size and setting are better than mediocre in your mind?
Duke, Vanderbilt, Brown, Princeton, Yale, Columbia, Harvard, MIT, Northwestern, UChicago, WUSTL, UPenn, Rice, and I’m sure a few others I’m missing too. All mid-sized colleges near or in cities. All significantly better than Emory in just about every way.
You're pathetic, Rice, WashU and Vandy are not better schools. You trying to be elitist but then say Rice is better than Emory?! Have you seen a Rice grad on Wall Street?! I haven't, I've seen plenty of Emory grads though.
I went to Wash. U., and I think of WUSTL, Emory, Vanderbilt, Case Western, Rice and the University of Rochester as being about the same: Medical schools and teaching hospitals with undergraduate colleges attached.
I think Case and U Roc are a step below but there all great schools, maybe Vandy slightly better because of how famous it is.
Vandy is famous?